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| History of Pakistan |
PAKISTAN RARELY PART OF
INDIA...
But, as the following
discussion will prove, during the Hindu period
it was the people of the Indus Valley in the
West and the Padma-Meghna Delta in the East that
mostly emerged triumphant. Both the wings
remained independent of Gangetic Valley and in
fact Pakistan-based governments ruled over
northern India more often and for much longer
periods than India has ruled over Pakistan
territories. What is more important, Pakistan as
an independent country always looked westward
and had more connections ------ cultural,
commercial as well as political ---- with the
Sumerian, Babylonian, Persian, Greek and Central
Asian civilizations than with the Gangetic
Valley. It was only from the Muslim period
onward that these two wings became subservient
to northern Indian governments. Even this period
is not devoid of revolts and successful
assertion of independence by the two wings. In
the pre-Muslim period, India’s great expansion
covering large portions of the sub-continent
took place only during the reigns of the Mauryas
(3rd century BC), the Guptas (4th century AD),
Raja Harsha (7th century AD), the Gurjara empire
of Raja Bhoj (8th century AD) and the Pratiharas
(9th century AD). It is important to note that
except for the Maurya period lasting barely a
hundred years, under none of the other dynasties
did the Hindu governments ever rule over
Pakistan. They always remained east of river
Sutlej. I shall quote a few passages from
history to substantiate my
statement.
"At the close of
Samudragupta’s triumphal career (4th century AD)
his empire --- the greatest in India since the
days of Asoka --- extended on the north to the
base of the mountains, but did not include
Kashmir…. Samudragupta did not attempt to carry
his arms across the Sutlej or to dispute the
authority of the Kushan Kings who continued to
rule in and beyond the Indus basin." (Oxford
History of India, By VA
Smith).
"Harsha’s subjugation of
upper India, excluding the punjab, but including
Bihar and at least the greater part of Bengal,
was completed in 612 AD."
(Ibid)
"The Gurjara empire of Bhoja
may be defined as, on the north, the foot of the
mountains; on the northwest, the Sutlej; on the
west the Hakra or the ‘lost-river’ forming the
boundary of Sind." (Ibid).
"The
rule of the Pratiharas had never extended across
the Sutlej, and the history of the Punjab
between the 7th and 10th centuries AD is
extremely obscure. At some time, not recorded, a
powerful kingdom had been formed, which extended
from the mountains beyond the Indus, eastwards
as far as the Hakra of lost-river, so that it
comprised a large part of the Punjab, as well as
probably northern Sind."
(Ibid)
"Politically during the time
when Hellenism in the south Asian sub-continent
was decaying and the centuries afterward, the
north-west remained separate from northern and
central India. The Gupta empire, which at its
height in the middle of the 4th century AD, and
the empire of Harsha in the middle of the 7th
century AD barely reached into the Punjab and
included none of Sind." (Pakistan and Western
Asia, by Norman Brown)
The above
quotations amply prove that none of the periods
of its greatest expansion did India succeed in
occupying Pakistan. The only exception is the
Maurya period in the 3rd century BC when Asoka’s
empire is said to have extended up to the Hindu
Kush, north of Kabul. Even in this isolated case
of the Mauryas, historians are aware that
Chandragupta Maurya, the founder of the Maurya
dynasty who hailed from Pakistan (Punjab), did
not get Pakistan by conquest but by diplomacy
from the Greek rulers who had succeeded
Alexander.
As pointed out by more
than one writer, the five thousand year history
of Pakistan reveals that its independence had
been a rule while its subservience to or
attachment with India an exception. "Throughout
most of the recorded history the north-west
(i.e. Pakistan) has normally been either
independent or incorporated in an empire whose
centre lay further in the west. The occasions
when it has been governed from a centre further
east (India) have been the exception rather than
the rule; and the creation of Pakistan which has
been described as a geographer’s nightmare is
historically a reversion to normal as Pakistan
is concerned." (A Study of History, by AJ
Toynbee)
During its five
thousand-year known history, Pakistan has been
subservient to Central Indian governments only
during the Maurya, the Turko-Afghan and British
periods who were Buddhist, Muslim and Christian
respectively. While the Mauryan (300-200 BC) and
British (1848-1947) periods lasted barely a
hundred years each, the turko-Afghan period was
the longest covering a span of 500
years.
Here we come across an
important ideological point. All the three
religions i.e. Buddhism, Islam and Christianity
which succeeded in uniting the sub-continent
under the Maurya, Turko-Afghan and British
rulers stood for universal brotherhood and were
spread all over the world. In the context of
ideology, the implications are obvious i.e.,
only people believing in universal brotherhood
could unite and hold this sub-continent
together. Otherwise Pakistan’s independence
could never be challenged nor its people subdued
by India’s Hindu Governments.
It is
of these celebrated lands and of their intrepid
people that we shall narrate the story here. In
this article we shall give a brief historical
background and the contribution made by each of
the groups that inhabit it: We shall begin with
a general account of the entire country first
and then take up the history of each group.
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